Bleau Christian, Filliol Aveline, Samson Michel, Lamontagne Lucie
Département des Sciences Biologiques, Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Institut de Recherche en Santé-Environnement-Travail, Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France.
J Virol. 2015 Oct;89(19):9896-908. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01501-15. Epub 2015 Jul 22.
Coronaviruses (CoVs) have shown neuroinvasive properties in humans and animals secondary to replication in peripheral organs, but the mechanism of neuroinvasion is unknown. The major aim of our work was to evaluate the ability of CoVs to enter the central nervous system (CNS) through the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Using the highly hepatotropic mouse hepatitis virus type 3 (MHV3), its attenuated variant, 51.6-MHV3, which shows low tropism for endothelial cells, and the weakly hepatotropic MHV-A59 strain from the murine coronavirus group, we investigated the virus-induced dysfunctions of BBB in vivo and in brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs) in vitro. We report here a MHV strain-specific ability to cross the BBB during acute infection according to their virulence for liver. Brain invasion was observed only in MHV3-infected mice and correlated with enhanced BBB permeability associated with decreased expression of zona occludens protein 1 (ZO-1), VE-cadherin, and occludin, but not claudin-5, in the brain or in cultured BMECs. BBB breakdown in MHV3 infection was not related to production of barrier-dysregulating inflammatory cytokines or chemokines by infected BMECs but rather to a downregulation of barrier protective beta interferon (IFN-β) production. Our findings highlight the importance of IFN-β production by infected BMECs in preserving BBB function and preventing access of blood-borne infectious viruses to the brain.
Coronaviruses (CoVs) infect several mammals, including humans, and are associated with respiratory, gastrointestinal, and/or neurological diseases. There is some evidence that suggest that human respiratory CoVs may show neuroinvasive properties. Indeed, the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV), causing severe acute respiratory syndrome, and the CoVs OC43 and 229E were found in the brains of SARS patients and multiple sclerosis patients, respectively. These findings suggest that hematogenously spread CoVs may gain access to the CNS at the BBB level. Herein we report for the first time that CoVs exhibit the ability to cross the BBB according to strain virulence. BBB invasion by CoVs correlates with virus-induced disruption of tight junctions on BMECs, leading to BBB dysfunction and enhanced permeability. We provide evidence that production of IFN-β by BMECs during CoV infection may prevent BBB breakdown and brain viral invasion.
冠状病毒(CoV)在人类和动物中已显示出继发于外周器官复制后的神经侵袭特性,但神经侵袭机制尚不清楚。我们工作的主要目的是评估CoV通过血脑屏障(BBB)进入中枢神经系统(CNS)的能力。我们使用高度嗜肝的3型小鼠肝炎病毒(MHV3)、其减毒株51.6-MHV3(对内皮细胞的嗜性较低)以及鼠冠状病毒组中嗜肝性较弱的MHV-A59株,在体内和体外脑微血管内皮细胞(BMEC)中研究了病毒诱导的BBB功能障碍。我们在此报告,根据它们对肝脏的毒力,MHV毒株在急性感染期间具有穿越BBB的特异性能力。仅在感染MHV3的小鼠中观察到脑侵袭,并且与脑或培养的BMEC中紧密连接蛋白1(ZO-1)、血管内皮钙黏蛋白和闭合蛋白表达降低相关的BBB通透性增强有关,但与claudin-5无关。MHV3感染中的BBB破坏与受感染的BMEC产生屏障调节性炎性细胞因子或趋化因子无关,而是与屏障保护性β干扰素(IFN-β)产生的下调有关。我们的发现突出了受感染的BMEC产生IFN-β在维持BBB功能和防止血源传染性病毒进入大脑方面的重要性。
冠状病毒(CoV)感染包括人类在内的多种哺乳动物,并与呼吸道、胃肠道和/或神经系统疾病相关。有一些证据表明,人类呼吸道CoV可能具有神经侵袭特性。事实上,分别在严重急性呼吸综合征患者和多发性硬化症患者的大脑中发现了导致严重急性呼吸综合征的严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒(SARS-CoV)以及CoV OC43和229E。这些发现表明,经血行传播的CoV可能在BBB水平进入CNS。在此我们首次报告,CoV根据毒株毒力表现出穿越BBB的能力。CoV对BBB的侵袭与病毒诱导的BMEC紧密连接破坏相关,导致BBB功能障碍和通透性增强。我们提供证据表明,CoV感染期间BMEC产生IFN-β可能预防BBB破坏和脑病毒侵袭。